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Best Practices When Using POEM to Treat Achalasia

February 13, 2025
in Health News
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The American Gastroenterological Association (AGA) has released a clinical practice update synthesizing current available evidence and expert opinion on peroral endoscopic myotomy (POEM) to treat achalasia and other esophageal motility disorders.

“Any patient suspected to have achalasia, or difficulty swallowing for that matter, should undergo a comprehensive diagnostic workup, and that should include clinical history, review of medication, as well as tests. The diagnosis should not be based on isolated tests but on the clinical picture as a whole,” first author Dennis Yang, MD, with the Center for Interventional Endoscopy, AdventHealth, Orlando, Florida, noted in an AGA podcast about the update.

The clinical practice update, published in Gastroenterology, includes 12 “best practice advice” statements.

Since its introduction to clinical practice more than a decade ago, POEM has matured and gained widespread acceptance due to its efficacy and safety profile.

POEM has at least similar outcomes to laparoscopic Heller myotomy and pneumatic dilation for type I and type II achalasia with better results for those with type III achalasia, Yang noted.

“However, besides disease phenotype, we need to remember that choosing the right treatment for the patient is going to be based on multiple factors including patient characteristics as well as local expertise,” Yang added.

In terms of technical considerations, the update states that both anterior and posterior tunnel approaches demonstrate comparable success and postprocedure reflux rates. Tunnel orientation should be tailored to the patient’s surgical history and endoscopist’s preference.

It further states that optimal length of the myotomy in the esophagus and cardia, as it pertains to treatment efficacy and risk for postprocedure reflux, remains to be determined.

Adjunct techniques, including real-time intraprocedure functional luminal impedance planimetry, may be considered to tailor or confirm the adequacy of the myotomy.

Same-day discharge after POEM can be considered in select patients who meet discharge criteria. Patients with advanced age, significant comorbidities, poor social support, and/or access to specialized care should be considered for hospital admission, irrespective of symptoms.

The update notes that specific guidelines on the role and extent of antibiotic prophylaxis before and after POEM are lacking. A single dose of antibiotics at the time of POEM “may be sufficient” for antibiotic prophylaxis.

In terms of immediate post-POEM care, the update notes that the clinical impact of routine esophagram or endoscopy immediately post-POEM remains unclear. Testing can be considered based on local practice preferences and in cases in which intraprocedural events or postprocedural findings warrant further evaluation.

Proton pump inhibitors are recommended immediately following POEM, as gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is common following POEM, occurring in up to 65% of cases.

Routine endoscopic surveillance is advised to monitor GERD, disease progression, and esophageal cancer risk, which is significantly higher in achalasia patients.

“Just like diabetes and hypertension, we need to remember that achalasia is a chronic disease and long-term postprocedural surveillance is strongly encouraged to monitor disease progression as well as potential complications of reflux,” Yang said.

He noted that surveillance should be considered irrespective of patient symptoms because many of these patients may remain asymptomatic.

“Primary gastroenterologists should have a very low threshold in referring the patient back to the POEM endoscopist or any specialized esophageal center because the ideology of symptoms in these patients can be quite difficult to tease out and often require comprehensive diagnostic workup,” Yang said.

Evidence for POEM in esophagogastric outflow obstruction and other nonachalasia spastic motility disorders is limited and should only be considered on a case-by-case basis after other less invasive approaches have been exhausted, the update states.

For perspective on the POEM clinical practice update, Medscape Medical News spoke with Mouen Khashab, MD, director of Therapeutic Endoscopy, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and member of the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy.

“The document is very well written and comprehensive, and in terms of the best practices, I’m pretty much in agreement with all of them,” Khashab said.

However, Khashab said he would have liked to see greater emphasis on the value or role of a short myotomy in the esophagus and cardia.

“There is level I evidence that the short esophageal myotomy is equivalent to a long esophageal myotomy for type I and II achalasia. When you do a short myotomy, you save procedure time and there is potentially a lower incidence of blown-out myotomy or BOM,” Khashab told Medscape Medical News.

Khashab also noted that a long myotomy on the gastric side “likely increases the risk of reflux disease, and therefore a limited myotomy on the gastric side likely also is advantageous.”

This research had no commercial funding. Yang serves as a consultant for Boston Scientific, Olympus, FujiFilm, Microtech, Medtronic, 3D-Matrix, and Neptune Medical; and received research support from Microtech and 3D-Matrix. Khashab had no relevant disclosures.

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Source link : https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/best-practices-when-using-poem-treat-achalasia-aga-clinical-2025a10003sh?src=rss

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Publish date : 2025-02-13 12:10:52

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